A recently reported behavioral screen in larval zebrafish for phenocopiers of known anesthetics and associated drugs yielded an isoflavone. Related isoflavones have also been reported as GABAA potentiators. From this, we synthesized a small library of isoflavones and incorporated an in vivo phenotypic approach to perform structure-behavior relationship studies of the screening hit and related analogs via behavioral profiling, patch-clamp experiments, and whole brain imaging. This revealed that analogs effect a range of behavioral responses, including sedation with and without enhancing the acoustic startle response. Interestingly, a subset of compounds effect sedation and enhancement of motor responses to both acoustic and light stimuli. Patch clamp recordings of cells with a human GABAA receptor confirmed that behavior-modulating isoflavones modify the GABA signaling. To better understand these molecules' nuanced effects on behavior, we performed whole brain imaging to reveal that analogs differentially effect neuronal activity. These studies demonstrate a multimodal approach to assessing activities of neuroactives.